After being rejected for CIP after recon 3 times (and them telling me to submit a second application??), I was approved for Amex Plat (just the 60k offer, couldn't get 100k to show up)! Funny how Amex insta-approves me for their highest tier card, while Chase grills me...

Also applied for CFU to build a history with Chase, that got rejected because they saw the two CIP applications as too many applications for credit even though they told me to reapply... recon today after a week succeeded in a whopping $500 CL.

I'm now officially 3/24 until September, when I'll drop back down to 2/24.

As someone very interested in immigration law (but nowhere near a lawyer, just an undergrad), I wanted to ask if this lawsuit has any actual merit? I might be very pro-immigration, but meritless lawsuits that will just get dismissed seems like a waste of effort to me.

Yes, as much as necessary to meet minimum spend. Still have to research what options there are in my area.

Yes, I have an LLC and corresponding EIN.

1 or 2 at this point. My long term goal is churning regularly but not sure if my credit and spending can sustain that.

I'm targeting travel, economy seats are fine.

I have a tiny bit of miles across many different airlines, with a concentration in Korean Air. I will likely not be using Korean Air in the future, however.

Boston Logan (BOS), Providence (PVD), and/or Seoul-Incheon (ICN).

I'd like to go to Western Europe (from BOS/PVD) or Southeast Asia (from ICN). Not sure if this goal is efficient mileage-wise; that's just how I imagine myself traveling since I go to school in the US but go to Korea some times during the year.

My AAoA (in this case, just one account) is 1.5 years so not sure how successful I'll be. My income is also low, since I'm a college student.

I was just denied for CIP this morning after recon. I'll try HUCA, but I don't have high hopes. I do have an LLC with an EIN and tax filings but it's more of a "business" than a business, since its annual profit is ~$1000. Their stated reasons were "few revolving accounts, business is too new."

Edit: CK says "Good Approval Odds" for the CSP, but skeptical as to its reliability, since after all they do get money from the referrals.

Just think of Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, and mainland China as four separate countries for immigration purposes. Leaving one to enter another is basically the same as exiting the country and entering another country.

Not China -> Mainland -> Hong Kong -> Macau -> Mainland technically requires you to have a double entry visa for the mainland, a visa for HK, and a visa for Macau.

Your flair says France, so I'm assuming you're a French citizen. EU citizens don't need a visa for HK or Macau, but make sure you have your itinerary for the HK/Macau part of the trip well-planned so you don't accidentally use up your visa entries :)

Also, a president can't just revoke a green card. Especially not citizenship. A court would invalidate that so quickly. (Unless it was found that they committed fraud during proceedings, which could very well be true)

If you do indeed qualify, then you are currently a citizen. But this doesn't mean you can automatically prove it. N-600 gives you a certificate that is primary evidence of your citizenship. You don't necessarily need to do this though.

You can probably apply for a passport if you have the sufficient documentation, like your dad's naturalization certificate, etc. Ask your passport acceptance facility (your post office might be one).